Training transfer and transfer motivation: The influence of individual, environmental, situational, training design, and affective reaction factors

The purpose of this study is to examine the effects of individual, environmental, training design, and affective reaction factors on training transfer and transfer motivation. To determine the relationship between these factors and their influence on training transfer and to test the model, the rese...

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書誌詳細
出版年:Performance Improvement Quarterly
第一著者: 2-s2.0-84898682095
フォーマット: 論文
言語:English
出版事項: International Society for Performance Improvement 2014
オンライン・アクセス:https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-84898682095&doi=10.1002%2fpiq.21165&partnerID=40&md5=32ddf3d050367cc4400a19be840eedde
id Awais Bhatti M.; Ali S.; Mohd Isa M.F.; Mohamed Battour M.
spelling Awais Bhatti M.; Ali S.; Mohd Isa M.F.; Mohamed Battour M.
2-s2.0-84898682095
Training transfer and transfer motivation: The influence of individual, environmental, situational, training design, and affective reaction factors
2014
Performance Improvement Quarterly
27
1
10.1002/piq.21165
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-84898682095&doi=10.1002%2fpiq.21165&partnerID=40&md5=32ddf3d050367cc4400a19be840eedde
The purpose of this study is to examine the effects of individual, environmental, training design, and affective reaction factors on training transfer and transfer motivation. To determine the relationship between these factors and their influence on training transfer and to test the model, the researchers collected data from employees in the Malaysian banking sector. Structural equation modeling with Amos 16 was used to test the model and determine the relationship. The study suggested that training stakeholders should manage the training program effectively. Transfer is maximized when trainees have social support, high performance self-efficacy, and transfer motivation. Stakeholders (e.g., trainers, trainees, supervisors, and peers) are important to the training transfer process, as are learner readiness, trainee reaction, instrumentality, and training retention. This study revealed that perceived content validity and transfer design work together and influence the trainee's performance self-efficacy. In other words, if trainers want to improve the performance self-efficacy level of trainees, they need to explain how the trainee can transfer the learned skills at the workplace and make sure the content of the training is similar to the actual job. The main objective of training programs is to align the employee's expertise with organizational goals. Organizations can achieve their desired objectives only when employees transfer the learned skills on the job. Unfortunately, employees often transfer only a small percentage of skills they have learned in training. To effectively manage their training programs, organizations need to identify and focus on the factors that resist effective training transfer. © 2014 International Society for Performance Improvement.
International Society for Performance Improvement
8985952
English
Article

author 2-s2.0-84898682095
spellingShingle 2-s2.0-84898682095
Training transfer and transfer motivation: The influence of individual, environmental, situational, training design, and affective reaction factors
author_facet 2-s2.0-84898682095
author_sort 2-s2.0-84898682095
title Training transfer and transfer motivation: The influence of individual, environmental, situational, training design, and affective reaction factors
title_short Training transfer and transfer motivation: The influence of individual, environmental, situational, training design, and affective reaction factors
title_full Training transfer and transfer motivation: The influence of individual, environmental, situational, training design, and affective reaction factors
title_fullStr Training transfer and transfer motivation: The influence of individual, environmental, situational, training design, and affective reaction factors
title_full_unstemmed Training transfer and transfer motivation: The influence of individual, environmental, situational, training design, and affective reaction factors
title_sort Training transfer and transfer motivation: The influence of individual, environmental, situational, training design, and affective reaction factors
publishDate 2014
container_title Performance Improvement Quarterly
container_volume 27
container_issue 1
doi_str_mv 10.1002/piq.21165
url https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-84898682095&doi=10.1002%2fpiq.21165&partnerID=40&md5=32ddf3d050367cc4400a19be840eedde
description The purpose of this study is to examine the effects of individual, environmental, training design, and affective reaction factors on training transfer and transfer motivation. To determine the relationship between these factors and their influence on training transfer and to test the model, the researchers collected data from employees in the Malaysian banking sector. Structural equation modeling with Amos 16 was used to test the model and determine the relationship. The study suggested that training stakeholders should manage the training program effectively. Transfer is maximized when trainees have social support, high performance self-efficacy, and transfer motivation. Stakeholders (e.g., trainers, trainees, supervisors, and peers) are important to the training transfer process, as are learner readiness, trainee reaction, instrumentality, and training retention. This study revealed that perceived content validity and transfer design work together and influence the trainee's performance self-efficacy. In other words, if trainers want to improve the performance self-efficacy level of trainees, they need to explain how the trainee can transfer the learned skills at the workplace and make sure the content of the training is similar to the actual job. The main objective of training programs is to align the employee's expertise with organizational goals. Organizations can achieve their desired objectives only when employees transfer the learned skills on the job. Unfortunately, employees often transfer only a small percentage of skills they have learned in training. To effectively manage their training programs, organizations need to identify and focus on the factors that resist effective training transfer. © 2014 International Society for Performance Improvement.
publisher International Society for Performance Improvement
issn 8985952
language English
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